12 February 2010

JEssay says has MOVED!

Jessie's blog and web portfolio have MOVED to wordpress!


Current Yoga Classes with Jessie, information about Yoga & Physical Thearpy, YogAscent Hand Powered Goods, and Jessie's yoga blog can be found at YogAscent.wordpress.com (click here)

Horseback & Hayloft Yoga classes, workshops and blog posts can be found at Horseback Yoga.wordpress.com (just click).


Om shanti shanti shanti.

11 February 2010

Weather

Colorado weather fascinates me.

It arrives suddenly
It rages
It passes, as suddenly,
to reveal blue-skied sunshine.

Unlike midwestern weather of my past
Which looms
Like heartache 
Or loss
Graying the skies for weeks,
months,
My skin turns gray, too.

I like the anticipation 
Of midwestern weather--
The mounting expectation, 
the building, as skies swell
Gradually
Into a fantastic delivery. 
There is nothing like a midwestern storm.

But wintertime becomes tiresome
Like a friend dwelling in sadness
Uninterested in solutions:
It defines a person, a place,
This emotional weathering.

Being here transforms me.
A deepening, then instant lift
of spirit:
Here I've become sunshine
Emotions pass through with the storms
Always to reveal light
After so long in dreary darkness.

Landscapes

Here is a small collection of landscape photos I shot on camp over the past nine months.  The dynamics of this western climate never fail to inspire and amaze me.  Being out here makes it easy to compose photos.  Enjoy!

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Pulling off at the side of Hwy 24 going west into Florissant.

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Guffey's swimming hole.  That's my buddy Ryan jumping from a high rock through the sun.

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A campsite on Sanborn property at dusk.

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A storm rolls in on Sanborn during a horse pack trip.

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Aspen!

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Jessie Spehar on Ebony rides into the clouds.

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Garden of the Gods.

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The ever-present Pikes Peak: I feel like it's watching me.

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Here's Pikes bathed in a summer sunset.

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My parents' solar-powered cabin nestled in the wet mountains of Canon City.

08 February 2010

Letter to My Parents

Dear Mom and Dad,

I'm reading a nonfiction book by Richard Louv called Last Child in the Woods, and it's the kind of experience that I love from a book: Reading it awakens truths in me that I already knew, somewhere, but hadn't yet articulated.  It's bringing back memories I'd long since forgotten from my childhood; a perfect invocation in this season of wintertime reflection.

The program here at Sanborn, especially the HTOEC School Weeks outdoor education curriculum and philosophy, is very much in line with the concepts in this book.  Reading it affirms what I'm doing with my life (teaching children how to connect with the outdoor world) and helps me to realize how timely and essential this work is.

So much of today's youth spend a majority of their time plugged in, on phones, in front of a TV, sitting at a computer or playing video games.  There's the obesity problem.  Natural spaces are diminishing and a culture of fear often prevents parents from allowing their children to venture outside unsupervised.  Kids are forgetting--or never learning--how to BE in the outdoors.  There are more and more studies showing a direct correlation between less time spent in unstructured outdoor play and an increase in mental, physical, and emotional illness.  This shift away from the natural world is devastating to our society on so many levels.

So, among all this, I write to thank you for allowing nature and unstructured, imaginative play to be a formative part of my childhood.  Maybe you weren't aware, as a parent, of exactly what I was doing as I explored the neighborhood, and perhaps that's part of the beauty of it.  I want to thank you for letting me run loose around Windbury Court to play with friends.  On any given afternoon, we would jump down into neighbors' window wells to collect toads in an old bucket; we'd explore the spooky forest behind the Burkes house to see who was bravest; I'd pick berries (even though you'd told me not to) to taste their bitterness then come home with stained fingertips.  Thank you for watching with me in wonder as pheasants and foxes crossed the church lot behind out house at dusk.  Thanks for trusting that a ring of the cowbell you mounted on the front porch would bring me home for dinner.

When we moved to Orchard Valley, ours was one of the first newly developed lots, and I thank you for re-installing the cowbell on that front porch and again letting me run free.  Thanks, Dad, for not getting too angry when I sneaked your hammer from the tool bench and ran across the vacant lots to the big oak tree next to the Baneks, where the neighbor kids and I constructed a tree fort using the 2x4s and nails we found on construction sites.  Thanks for taking us sledding down the hills of the golf course when it snowed.  Thanks for letting the dogs run without leashes, us behind them.  We moved to Orchard Valley at the perfect time--before the open space of those lots was developed--and we moved away just as houses began to close in.

Thank you for the farm.  Even now, years later, I haven't found the words to encapsulate that time through junior high and high school.  Summer days on the back of my horse in the sunshine, watching fields and fields of cornstalks sway in the wind.  Those memories still soothe me today.

When developers snatched up the endless seas of farmland surrounding our five acres, and when we had to move, too, it was like a piece of me was lost--for a very, very long time.  College, the city, traveling ... I kept searching, but nothing seemed to fill that void.

And now, thank you for Colorado.  Mom and Dad, you are the reason I am here.  I guess I should thank Own Your Own Mountain dot com, too, eh Dad?  Having escaped the city and now rediscovering my Self, I'm happy as I was as a child in the woods.  There's magic in this environment, space for growth and a re-kindling of what I lost when I alienated myself from horses and from nature.

And now I have a job that values this essential connection to nature as much as I do.  I spend my days igniting wonder in kids who normally spend their days plugged in.  The shift that happens out here is profound, and their lives, I truly hope, are changed by it.

Howard Gardner talks about the eight intelligences (and possibly more--see his paper titled A Multiplicity of Intelligences).  One is the Naturalist Intelligence.  Because of you, I think that's me.  You guys instilled in me a deep love of the natural world, and now, since you've exposed me to Colorado, I've found it again.  Thank you.

Love,
Jessie

07 February 2010

Sanborn Blogging




I just posted a new entry to the Sanborn Western Camps blog about the transformative and healing power of quiet time in an aspen grove.  Check it out!

06 February 2010

Aspen Stand

I sit in this small aspen grove
My book and pen in hand
Taking a moment to absorb
Reflecting on the land

The wind picks up its haunting voice
Whispering through the trees
And I can't help but wonder if
Its message is for me

Far too much time I've spent the past
Cooped up inside all day
And gradually those forest voices
Start to drift away

Preoccupied with this and that
I'd spend my life inside
Until a profound part of me--
My Natural Self--died

The only way to get it back
And feel again like me
Is to take some time, like today,
To lean against a tree.

The voices of the forest, now,
Even as I sit here
They rise in volume and in voice
To captivate my ear

A promise to myself I make--
One with this aspen stand--
I shall never lose sight of me
And me in nature's land

02 February 2010

The Great Escape


I did chores this morning at the barn in my pajamas--fairly certain that after I filled water buckets, pulled our herd of 10 horses out of turnout to feed them, let them back in, doctored a few wounds and fed the goats, I would head home to my cabin and crawl back into bed.

Things went smoothly at first: the water wasn't frozen over for about the first day all week (we'd been having breaker/fuse problems), the horses came down from their top pen so I didn't have to hike through the pasture to catch them, and each horse stood with a feed bag tied to its muzzle eating grain and supplements without incident.

I fed the goats and rabbit while the horses munched, refilled water tanks and tended to the two horses with leg wraps.

I decided to keep Rocket, a lineback dun (a cream color with a darker dorsal stripe) mare with unfortunately dry, cracking hooves, tied up so I could give her feet some TLC.  I turned the rest of the herd loose into the pens.

I opened the gate to the upper hay trap and the horses moseyed through lazily, full from breakfast.

As I bent down to apply hoof dressing to Rocket's dry feet, her body tensed.  I heard a commotion.  Thundering hoofbeats pounded the ground.  I looked up to watch Misty, Izzy, Lola ... then Rev, Pete, Beauty, Cindy, Sandy--the entire herd--tear off out another side gate I'd accidentally left open.  Across the road, snow flew underfoot from their jubilant escape, and they disappeared into the Ponderosa forest near the four story treehouse.

I stood for a moment, staring at the trees where they'd disappeared, unbelieving.

Rocket's screaming whinny broke my trance.  Rocket, an ancy half-thoroughbred mare, had separation anxieties and a reputation for throwing a rider in the past.  In my mind, she was unpredictable at best and even potentially dangerous in a situation like this.  Riding her alone away from the herd was intimidating enough, but riding her as her fellow herd mates gallivanted freely was not my idea of a relaxing morning.

But what was my choice?  The ranch covers 6,000 acres, and I couldn't be certain that this small group of horses wouldn't stop until they reached our larger herd of 55, grazing in a far away pasture for the winter.  I kept hoping that they would circle back to the barn as I ran to grab my saddle and bridle.

I quickly tacked Rocket up, promising I'd give her a good grooming after the ride, stuffed extra halters into my saddlebags, and strapped my chaps on over my stretchy thin pajama pants.  Meanwhile, Rocket screamed at her runaway friends--wherever they were--and pranced side to side, pawing at the ground.  This was going to be interesting.

I swung up onto the saddle as she walked off in the direction they'd disappeared to.  The seat was freezing cold through my thin pants, which provided absolutely no padding.  Now I know why cowboys wear jeans, I thought.  I lengthened my breathing to exude calmness as Rocket pranced across the road and literally jumped over a ditch.

Searching for fresh tracks in the snow, I tried to relax into the idea that I wouldn't find the horses any faster if I was freaking out or berating myself for leaving the gate open.  Feeding my exasperation would only fire Rocket up more.  So, I set my intention for the ride: I am going to enjoy this searchAfter all, I thought, who do I know that has this particular set of problems?  I smiled as Rocket pranced into the Ponderosa forest, screeching a high-pitched whinny every few seconds.

Instead of trying to force her to flat walk (as was my first instinct), I flowed with her movement a bit, letting her jog a few steps then scratching her on the neck when she slowed.  It was counter-intuitive, but Rocket seemed to calm slightly: her head dropped lower and her tense body eased.

I couldn't find the tracks in the snow.  We headed toward the gate leading to Little Blue, a "mini-mountain"--the highest point on camp.  To my dismay, the gate was open.  This pasture extended beyond the mini-mountain and all the way to the front of Sanborn property.  They could be anywhere.  The good news: fresh horse tracks.

Rocket screamed.  No answer.  She's pretty much the outcast of the herd, so I didn't expect anyone to whinny back.  I scratched Rocket's neck, thanking her for trying.

At times, she lowered her nose, sniffing the ground as if to pick up a trail like a hunting dog.  Then she lifted her head with newfound determination and began to jog.  I was okay with this as long as it was a controlled speed.  She seemed to know our goal, or at least she wanted to find the others as much as I did.  As we passed through aspen groves coated with snow, the sun warming through the leaves, I couldn't help but grin to myself, thinking, This is better than a nap any day.  It was a clear, warm morning and Rocket was surprisingly great: I didn't feel out of control and she genuinely seemed to want to find the herd.  We wove along the trail, my eyes on snowy hoof prints, and ended up at the boy's camp barn.

Another open gate.  This time, tracks led everywhere--did those runaways have a party at Big Spring barn?  I couldn't tell what went where.  On a whim, I let Rocket guide me this time as we cleared the ridge toward the boys cabins and picked up the hoofprint trail again, this time heading back toward the High Trails girls camp and barn.  Rocket trotted along at a good clip, occasionally lowering her nose almost to the ground.  Uphill, she picked up a slow lope.  I let her continue until we reached the road where our journey had started.

Magically, there they were, all of them, just up the hill inside the top hay trap, casually munching on hay.  Rocket slowed to a walk.  I scratched her sweaty withers and we cruised back to the barn.

Maren, the riding director and barn manager, pulled up.  The herd had returned, puffing and damp with sweat, and she'd simply lured them back in through the gate with a bucket of grain.  They seemed glad to be home.  "I think they'll think twice before pulling that again," she said, "they know where they get breakfast."

As promised, I scrubbed Rocket until she was dry, thanking her for being so pleasant and determined on the trail, and thanking myself for having patience with her.  In this case, I had no choice but to trust her.  This ride helped me break through my fear, my preconceived ideas of Rocket's behavior on the trial.  She is really a sweet horse, wanting to please.  Like all horses, I'm learning, it just takes a little patience and the ability to listen without such an agenda to come to an understanding.  Rocket and I connected today, and that may not have happened had the herd not made their Great Escape.

What a way to spend my weekend morning.  I hadn't intended to ride, but I was glad I did.  And when I finally got back into my cabin, I napped like a baby and dreamed of horses.

These photos of Rocket and I, taken by Jenny Hartman, were shot a few weeks ago while on a far more low-key ride.